Roger I. Abrams

Roger I. Abrams

Posted: June 18, 2009 04:53 PM

Drip, Drip... Sosa... Drip, Drip

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Baseball's saga of sorrow continues. The latest hero to be toppled from his pedestal is Sammy Sosa, the joyous Dominican who, together with Mark McGwire, brought baseball back from the edge of despair with their home run derby in the 1998 season. That was a glorious season that reminded us why we love this game. Sammy's trademarkable jump after connecting with a dinger brought him fans nationwide. His career total of 609 home runs paved an expressway through the New York State backwoods to Cooperstown. Of course, we have now learned it was only an artificial game of fantasy baseball. The recent disclosure that he was among the remaining 103 names on the list of positive drug testers was another punch in the stomach.

By now, baseball fans may have developed an immunity to further insults such as this revelation. The Sosa disclosure has spawned a debate whether the time has come to lay out all the remaining 102 names on the list and get on with the post-steroid era. Yet, the curious Manny Ramirez suspension suggests that we may not be done after all.

No one seems to have acted upon my suggestion in an earlier blog that Major League Baseball and the Players Association create a bipartite Truth and Reconciliation Commission to clean up those aging matters. Those who argue against full disclosure remind us that the players had been promised complete confidentiality when they took the tests in 2003. That promise seems so flimsy in retrospect that players who relied upon it were naïve. Nothing remains sacred anymore, not even a person's word.

Who then is disclosing the information about the 2003 tests? The list is in the possession of the U.S. Attorney's Office which would have no apparent motive to feed the press this information drop-by-drop. Of course, these leaks are in violation of a court order. Certainly a complete data dump would result in a contempt citation, so we are left with this periodic waterboarding. Having read Professor John Yoo's memos, I know that this is not torture. It only seems that way.

Perhaps we can make these periodic disclosures into a game of sorts. Who will be the next drip? Check the Mitchell Report for the usual group of suspects. Email in your choices. We'll set the odds. The payoff is the usual with these matters. Nothing.

Baseball's saga of sorrow continues. The latest hero to be toppled from his pedestal is Sammy Sosa, the joyous Dominican who, together with Mark McGwire, brought baseball back from the edge of despai...
Baseball's saga of sorrow continues. The latest hero to be toppled from his pedestal is Sammy Sosa, the joyous Dominican who, together with Mark McGwire, brought baseball back from the edge of despai...
 
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Although I'm no fan of Alex Rodriguez, I am a Cubs and a Sosa fan, and just like A-Rod, I am crying foul on this "disclosure" about the 2003 drug tests. For one, who has the facts here? Certainly nobody who is doing the reporting. It's all rumor and conjecture. And two, weren't the players notified at the time that they tested positive, and if not, why not? What possible reason could there have been for the whole, "secret" test that was never to have been revealed or released? There sure seems to be a lot of backpeddling by Bud Selig, who every day does the impossible by becoming an even worse baseball commissioner than when he was awarded the job by his buddies, the other owners. This is unfair to the players who are still playing, unfair to the players who have since retired, and unfair to the fans. Either publish all the results, with the facts to back it up, or destroy the results, as the players were promised at the time. I don't wan't names to be dribbled out everytime someone is considered for the Hall Of Fame. What a cruel trick to play on the fans. Shame on the players, shame on Bud Selig, and Shame on Major League Baseball for letting this happen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:53 AM on 06/21/2009
- normathumb I'm a Fan of normathumb 24 fans permalink

Hmmmm. Well, that's sportsmanship. It's a good thing we have sports role models like this to promote leadership and integrity for the kids. It;s the same in politics and business.
We need to forget our Parson Weems vision of our virtue and get real from the overheated parent at the little league to self serving politicians and business hackery that is the American way. We are the chosen people, or at least, I am. Give me mine and get out of my way. And when it's over, I'll take a few honorifics for being such a swell. Don't look under the carpet. Don't check behind the curtain and don't worry about those little people who got trampled under foot. Especially those suckers who actually buy into the truth, justice and the American way cra p.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:58 AM on 06/19/2009
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